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Nature, Not Human Activity,

Rules the Climate


© 2008, Science and Environmental Policy Project / S. Fred Singer

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Report of the Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change, Chicago, IL: The Heartland
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Printed in the United States of America


978-1-934791-01-1
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Second printing: April 2008


Nature, Not Human Activity,
Rules the Climate
Summary for Policymakers of the Report of the
Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change

Edited by S. Fred Singer

Contributors

Warren Anderson Fred Goldberg Olavi Kärner Tom Segalstad


United States Sweden Estonia Norway

Dennis Avery Vincent Gray Madhav Khandekar S. Fred Singer


United States New Zealand Canada United States

Franco Battaglia Kenneth Haapala William Kininmonth George Taylor


Italy United States Australia United States

Robert Carter Klaus Heiss Hans Labohm Dick Thoenes


Australia Austria Netherlands Netherlands

Richard Courtney Craig Idso Christopher Monckton Anton Uriarte


United Kingdom United States United Kingdom Spain

Joseph D’Aleo Zbigniew Jaworowski Lubos Motl Gerd Weber


United States Poland Czech Republic Germany

Published for the Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change


by
Foreword
In his speech at the United Nations’ climate scientists in the U.S. In the 1960s, he established
conference on September 24, 2007, Dr. Vaclav and served as the first director of the U.S. Weather
Klaus, president of the Czech Republic, said it Satellite Service, now part of the National
would most help the debate on climate change if the Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration
current monopoly and one-sidedness of the (NOAA), and earned a U.S. Department of
scientific debate over climate change by the Commerce Gold Medal Award for his technical
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) leadership. In the 1980s, Singer served for five
were eliminated. He reiterated his proposal that the years as vice chairman of the National Advisory
UN organize a parallel panel and publish two Committee for Oceans and Atmosphere (NACOA)
competing reports. and became more directly involved in global
The present report of the Nongovernmental environmental issues.
International Panel on Climate Change (NIPCC) Since retiring from the University of Virginia
does exactly that. It is an independent examination and from his last federal position as chief scientist
of the evidence available in the published, of the Department of Transportation, Singer
peer-reviewed literature – examined without bias founded and directed the nonprofit Science and
and selectivity. It includes many research papers Environmental Policy Project, an organization I am
ignored by the IPCC, plus additional scientific pleased to serve as chair. SEPP’s major concern has
results that became available after the IPCC been the use of sound science rather than
deadline of May 2006. exaggerated fears in formulating environmental
The IPCC is pre-programmed to produce reports policies.
to support the hypotheses of anthropogenic warming Our concern about the environment, going back
and the control of greenhouse gases, as envisioned some 40 years, has taught us important lessons. It is
in the Global Climate Treaty. The 1990 IPCC one thing to impose drastic measures and harsh
Summary completely ignored satellite data, since economic penalties when an environmental problem
they showed no warming. The 1995 IPCC report is clear-cut and severe. It is foolish to do so when
was notorious for the significant alterations made to the problem is largely hypothetical and not
the text after it was approved by the scientists – in substantiated by observations. As NIPCC shows by
order to convey the impression of a human offering an independent, non-governmental ‘second
influence. The 2001 IPCC report claimed the opinion’ on the ‘global warming’ issue, we do not
twentieth century showed ‘unusual warming’ based currently have any convincing evidence or
on the now-discredited hockey-stick graph. The observations of significant climate change from
latest IPCC report, published in 2007, completely other than natural causes.
devaluates the climate contributions from changes
in solar activity, which are likely to dominate any
human influence.
The foundation for NIPCC was laid five years Frederick Seitz
ago when a small group of scientists from the President Emeritus, Rockefeller University
United States and Europe met in Milan during one Past President, National Academy of Sciences
of the frequent UN climate conferences. But it got Past President, American Physical Society
going only after a workshop held in Vienna in April Chairman, Science and Environmental Policy
2007, with many more scientists, including some Project
from the Southern Hemisphere.
The NIPCC project was conceived and directed February 2008
by Dr. S. Fred Singer, professor emeritus of
environmental sciences at the University of Dr. Seitz passed away on March 2, 2008 at the age
Virginia. He should be credited with assembling a of 96. He will be greatly missed by all of us who
superb group of scientists who helped put this knew and admired him.
volume together.
Singer is one of the most distinguished

iii
Preface
Before facing major surgery, wouldn’t you want a were appointed by governments, and its Summaries
second opinion? for Policymakers (SPM) have been subject to
When a nation faces an important decision that approval by member governments of the UN. The
risks its economic future, or perhaps the fate of the scientists involved with the IPCC are almost all
ecology, it should do the same. It is a time-honored supported by government contracts, which pay not
tradition in this case to set up a ‘Team B,’ which only for their research but for their IPCC activities.
examines the same original evidence but may reach Most travel to and hotel accommodations at exotic
a different conclusion. The Nongovernmental locations for the drafting authors is paid with
International Panel on Climate Change (NIPCC) government funds.
was set up to examine the same climate data used by The history of the IPCC has been described in
the United Nations-sponsored Intergovernmental several publications. What is not emphasized,
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). however, is the fact that it was an activist enterprise
On the most important issue, the IPCC’s claim from the very beginning. Its agenda was to justify
that “most of the observed increase in global control of the emission of greenhouse gases,
average temperatures since the mid-20th century is especially carbon dioxide. Consequently, its
very likely (defined by the IPCC as between 90 to scientific reports have focused solely on evidence
99 percent certain) due to the observed increase in that might point toward human-induced climate
anthropogenic greenhouse gas concentrations,” change. The role of the IPCC “is to assess on a
(emphasis in the original), NIPCC reaches the comprehensive, objective, open and transparent
opposite conclusion – namely, that natural causes basis the latest scientific, technical and
are very likely to be the dominant cause. Note: We socio-economic literature produced worldwide
do not say anthropogenic greenhouse (GH) gases relevant to the understanding of the risk of
cannot produce some warming. Our conclusion is human-induced climate change, its observed and
that the evidence shows they are not playing a projected impacts and options for adaptation and
significant role. mitigation” (emphasis added) [IPCC 2008].
Below, we first sketch out the history of the two The IPCC’s three chief ideologues have been
organizations and then list the conclusions and (the late) Professor Bert Bolin, a meteorologist at
responses that form the body of the NIPCC report. Stockholm University; Dr. Robert Watson, an
atmospheric chemist at NASA, later at the World
Bank, and now chief scientist at the UK Department
A Brief History of the IPCC of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs; and Dr.
The rise in environmental consciousness since the John Houghton, an atmospheric radiation physicist
1970s has focused on a succession of ‘calamities’: at Oxford University, later head of the UK Met
cancer epidemics from chemicals, extinction of Office as Sir John Houghton.
birds and other species by pesticides, the depletion Watson had chaired a self-appointed group to
of the ozone layer by supersonic transports and later find evidence for a human effect on stratospheric
by freons, the death of forests (‘Waldsterben’) ozone and was instrumental in pushing for the 1987
because of acid rain, and finally, global warming, Montreal Protocol to control the emission of
the “mother of all environmental scares” (according chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). Using the blueprint of
to the late Aaron Wildavsky). the Montreal Protocol, environmental lawyer David
The IPCC can trace its roots to World Earth Doniger of the Natural Resources Defense Council
Day in 1970, the Stockholm Conference in 1971-72, then laid out a plan to achieve the same kind of
and the Villach Conferences in 1980 and 1985. In control mechanism for greenhouse gases, a plan that
July 1986, the United Nations Environment eventually was adopted as the Kyoto Protocol.
Program (UNEP) and the World Meteorological From the very beginning, the IPCC was a
Organization (WMO) established the political rather than scientific entity, with its leading
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) scientists reflecting the positions of their
as an organ of the United Nations. governments or seeking to induce their governments
The IPCC’s key personnel and lead authors to adopt the IPCC position. In particular, a small

iv
group of activists wrote the all-important Summary the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
for Policymakers (SPM) for each of the four IPCC [Singer et al. 1997].
reports [McKitrick et al. 2007]. SAR also provoked the 1996 publication of the
While we are often told about the thousands of Leipzig Declaration by SEPP, which was signed by
scientists on whose work the Assessment reports are some 100 climate scientists. A booklet titled “The
based, the vast majority of these scientists have no Scientific Case Against the Global Climate Treaty”
direct influence on the conclusions expressed by the followed in September 1997 and was translated into
IPCC. Those are produced by an inner core of several languages. [SEPP 1997. All these are
scientists, and the SPMs are revised and agreed to, available online at www.sepp.org.]
line-by-line, by representatives of member In spite of its obvious shortcomings, the IPCC
governments. This obviously is not how real report provided the underpinning for the Kyoto
scientific research is reviewed and published. Protocol, which was adopted in December 1997.
These SPMs turn out, in all cases, to be highly The background is described in detail in the booklet
selective summaries of the voluminous science “Climate Policy – From Rio to Kyoto,” published
reports – typically 800 or more pages, with no by the Hoover Institution [Singer 2000]. The Kyoto
indexes (except, finally, the Fourth Assessment Protocol also provoked the adoption of a short
Report released in 2007), and essentially unreadable statement expressing doubt about its scientific
except by dedicated scientists. foundation by the Oregon Institute for Science and
The IPCC’s First Assessment Report [IPCC- Medicine, which attracted more than 19,000
FAR 1990] concluded that the observed temperature signatures from scientists, mainly in the U.S. [The
changes were “broadly consistent” with greenhouse statement is still attracting signatures, and can be
models. Without much analysis, it arrived at a viewed at www.oism.org.]
“climate sensitivity” of a 1.5º to 4.5º C temperature The Third Assessment Report of the IPCC
rise for a doubling of greenhouse gases. The [IPCC-TAR 2001] was noteworthy for its use of
IPCC-FAR led to the adoption of the Global spurious scientific papers to back up its SPM claim
Climate Treaty at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de of “new and stronger evidence” of anthropogenic
Janeiro. global warming. One of these was the so called
The FAR drew a critical response [SEPP 1992]. ‘hockey-stick’ paper, an analysis of proxy data,
FAR and the IPCC’s style of work also were which claimed the twentieth century was the
criticized in two editorials in Nature [Anonymous warmest in the past 1,000 years. The paper was later
1994, Maddox 1991]. found to contain basic errors in its statistical
The IPCC’s Second Assessment Report [IPCC- analysis. The IPCC also supported a paper that
SAR 1996] was completed in 1995 and published in claimed pre-1940 warming was of human origin and
1996. Its SPM contained the memorable conclusion, caused by greenhouse gases. This work, too,
“the balance of evidence suggests a discernible contained fundamental errors in its statistical
human influence on global climate.” The SAR was analysis. The SEPP response to TAR was a 2002
again heavily criticized, this time for having booklet, “The Kyoto Protocol is Not Backed by
undergone significant changes in the body of the Science” [SEPP 2002].
report to make it ‘conform’ to the SPM – after it The Fourth Assessment Report of the IPCC
was finally approved by the scientists involved in [IPCC-AR4 2007] was published in 2007; the SPM
writing the report. Not only was the report altered, of Working Group I was released in February; and
but a key graph was also doctored to suggest a the full report from this Working Group was
human influence. The evidence presented to support released in May – after it had been changed, once
the SPM conclusion turned out to be completely again, to ‘conform’ to the Summary. It is significant
spurious. that AR4 no longer makes use of the hockey-stick
There is voluminous material available about paper or the paper claiming pre-1940 human-caused
these text changes, including a Wall Street Journal warming.
editorial article by Dr. Frederick Seitz [Seitz 1996]. AR4 concluded that “most of the observed
This led to heated discussions between supporters of increase in global average temperatures since the
the IPCC and those who were aware of the altered mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed
text and graph, including an exchange of letters in increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas

v
concentrations” (emphasis in the original). commissioned or authorized our efforts, and we do
However, as the present report will show, it ignored not advise or support the candidacies of any
available evidence against a human contribution to politicians or candidates for public office.
current warming and the substantial research of the We donated our time and best efforts to produce
past few years on the effects of solar activity on this report out of concern that the IPCC was
climate change. provoking an irrational fear of anthropogenic global
Why have the IPCC reports been marred by warming based on incomplete and faulty science.
controversy and so frequently contradicted by Global warming hype has led to demands for
subsequent research? Certainly its agenda to find unrealistic efficiency standards for cars, the
evidence of a human role in climate change is a construction of uneconomic wind and solar energy
major reason; its organization as a government stations, the establishment of large production
entity beholden to political agendas is another major facilities for uneconomic biofuels such as ethanol
reason; and the large professional and financial from corn, requirements that electric companies
rewards that go to scientists and bureaucrats who purchase expensive power from so-called
are willing to bend scientific facts to match those ‘renewable’energy sources, and plans to sequester,
agendas is yet a third major reason. at considerable expense, carbon dioxide emitted
Another reason for the IPCC’s unreliability is from power plants. While there is absolutely
the naive acceptance by policymakers of ‘peer- nothing wrong with initiatives to increase energy
reviewed’ literature as necessarily authoritative. It efficiency or diversify energy sources, they cannot
has become the case that refereeing standards for be justified as a realistic means to control climate.
many climate-change papers are inadequate, often In addition, policies have been developed that
because of the use of an ‘invisible college’ of try to hide the huge cost of greenhouse gas controls,
reviewers of like inclination to a paper’s authors. such as cap and trade, a Clean Development
[Wegman et al. 2006] (For example, some leading Mechanism, carbon offsets, and similar schemes
IPCC promoters surround themselves with as many that enrich a few at the expense of the rest of us.
as two dozen coauthors when publishing research Seeing science clearly misused to shape public
papers.) Policy should be set upon a background of policies that have the potential to inflict severe
demonstrable science, not upon simple (and often economic harm, particularly on low-income groups,
mistaken) assertions that, because a paper was we choose to speak up for science at a time when
refereed, its conclusions must be accepted. too few people outside the scientific community
know what is happening, and too few scientists who
know the truth have the will or the platforms to
Nongovernmental International Panel on speak out against the IPCC.
Climate Change (NIPCC) NIPCC is what its name suggests: an
When new errors and outright falsehoods were international panel of nongovernment scientists and
observed in the initial drafts of AR4, SEPP set up a scholars who have come together to understand the
‘Team B’ to produce an independent evaluation of causes and consequences of climate change.
the available scientific evidence. While the initial Because we are not predisposed to believe climate
organization took place at a meeting in Milan in change is caused by human greenhouse gas
2003, ‘Team B’ was activated only after the AR4 emissions, we are able to look at evidence the IPCC
SPM appeared in February 2007. It changed its ignores. Because we do not work for any
name to NIPCC and organized an international governments, we are not biased toward the
climate workshop in Vienna in April 2007. assumption that greater government regulation is
The present report stems from the Vienna necessary to avert imagined catastrophes.
workshop and subsequent research and
contributions by a larger group of international
scholars. For a list of those contributors, see page ii. Looking Ahead
What was our motivation? It wasn’t financial The public’s fear of anthropogenic global warming
self-interest: No grants or contributions were seems to be at a fever pitch. Polls show most people
provided or promised in return for producing this in most countries believe human greenhouse gas
report. It wasn’t political: No government agency emissions are a major cause of climate change and

vi
that action must be taken to reduce them, although We regret that many advocates in the debate
most people apparently are not willing to make the have chosen to give up debating the science and
financial sacrifices required [Pew 2007]. now focus almost exclusively on questioning the
While the present report makes it clear that the motives of ‘skeptics’ and on ad hominem attacks.
scientific debate is tilting away from global We view this as a sign of desperation on their part,
warming alarmism, we are pleased to see the and a sign that the debate has shifted toward climate
political debate also is not over. Global warming realism.
‘skeptics’ in the policy arena include Vaclav Klaus, We hope the present study will help bring
president of the Czech Republic; Helmut Schmidt, reason and balance back into the debate over
former German chancellor; and Lord Nigel Lawson, climate change, and by doing so perhaps save the
former United Kingdom chancellor of the peoples of the world from the burden of paying for
exchequer. On the other side are global warming wasteful, unnecessary energy and environmental
fearmongers, including UK science advisor Sir policies. We stand ready to defend the analysis and
David King and his predecessor Robert May (now conclusion in the study that follows, and to give
Lord May), and of course Al Gore, former vice further advice to policymakers who are open-
president of the U.S. In spite of increasing pressures minded on this most important topic.
to join Kyoto and adopt mandatory emission limits
on carbon dioxide, President George W. Bush in the
United States has resisted – so far.

S. Fred Singer
President, Science and Environmental Policy Project
Professor Emeritus of Environmental Science, University of Virginia
Fellow, American Geophysical Union, American Physical Society, American Association for the
Advancement of Science, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics

Arlington, Virginia
February 2008

Acknowledgments: I thank Joseph and Diane Bast of The Heartland Institute for their superb editorial skill
in turning a manuscript into a finished report.

vii
Contents

Foreword . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iii

Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iv

1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1

2. How much of modern warming is anthropogenic? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2

3. Most of modern warming is due to natural causes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

4. Climate models are not reliable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

5. The rate of sea-level rise is unlikely to increase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

6. Do anthropogenic greenhouse gases heat the oceans? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19

7. How much do we know about carbon dioxide in the


atmosphere? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20

8. The effects of human carbon dioxide emissions are


benign . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23

9. The economic effects of modest warming are likely


to be positive . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

10. Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

About the Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

About the Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31

Acronyms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37

Recommended Reading . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Nature, Not Human Activity, Rules the Climate
Summary for Policymakers of the Report of the
Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change

available, was ignored by the IPCC.


1. Introduction The IPCC continues to undervalue the
overwhelming evidence that, on decadal and
The Fourth Assessment Report of the century-long time scales, the Sun and associated
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s atmospheric cloud effects are responsible for much
Working Group-1 (Science) (IPCC-AR4 2007), of past climate change. It is therefore highly likely
released in 2007, is a major research effort by a that the Sun is also a major cause of twentieth-
group of dedicated specialists in many topics related century warming, with anthropogenic GH gases
to climate change. It forms a valuable compendium making only a minor contribution. In addition, the
of the current state of the science, enhanced by IPCC ignores, or addresses imperfectly, other
having an index, which had been lacking in science issues that call for discussion and
previous IPCC reports. AR4 also permits access to explanation.
the numerous critical comments submitted by expert The present report by the Nongovernmental
reviewers, another first for the IPCC. International Panel on Climate Change (NIPCC)
While AR4 is an impressive document, it is far focuses on two major issues:
from being a reliable reference work on some of the
most important aspects of climate change science ! The very weak evidence that the causes of the
and policy. It is marred by errors and misstatements, current warming are anthropogenic (Section 2)
ignores scientific data that were available but were
inconsistent with the authors’ pre-conceived ! The far more robust evidence that the causes of
conclusions, and has already been contradicted in the current warming are natural (Section 3).
important parts by research published since May
2006, the IPCC’s cut-off date.
In general, the IPCC fails to consider important We then addresses a series of less crucial topics:
scientific issues, several of which would upset its
major conclusion – that “most of the observed ! Computer models are unreliable guides to future
increase in global average temperatures since the climate conditions (Section 4)
mid-20th century is very likely (defined by the IPCC
as between 90 to 99 percent certain) due to the ! Sea-level rise is not significantly affected by
observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas rise in GH gases (Section 5)
concentrations” (emphasis in the original).
The IPCC does not apply generally accepted ! The data on ocean heat content have been
methodologies to determine what fraction of current misused to suggest anthropogenic warming. The
warming is natural, or how much is caused by the role of GH gases in the reported rise in ocean
rise in greenhouse (GH) gases. A comparison of temperature is largely unknown (Section 6)
‘fingerprints’ from best available observations with
the results of state-of-the-art GH models leads to the ! Understanding of the atmospheric carbon
conclusion that the (human-caused) GH contribution dioxide budget is incomplete (Section 7)
is minor. This fingerprint evidence, though

1
! Higher concentrations of CO2 are more likely is tertiary in greenhouse effect behind water
to be beneficial to plant and animal life and to vapor (WV) and high-level clouds. All other
human health than lower concentrations things being equal, doubling carbon dioxide in
(Section 8) the atmosphere will increase temperatures by
about 1 degree Celsius. Yet, as discussed below,
! The economic effects of modest warming are the computer models used by the IPCC
likely to be positive and beneficial to human consistently exaggerate this warming by
health (Section 9) including a positive feedback from WV,
without any empirical justification.
! Conclusion: Our imperfect understanding of
the causes and consequences of climate change ! In his classic Climate, History, and the Modern
means the science is far from settled. This, in World, H.H. Lamb [1982] traced the changes in
turn, means proposed efforts to mitigate climate climate since the last ice age ended about
change by reducing GH gas emissions are 10,000 years ago. He found extensive periods
premature and misguided. Any attempt to warmer than today and cooler than today. The
influence global temperatures by reducing such last warm period ended less than 800 years ago.
emissions would be both futile and expensive When comparing these climate changes with
(Section 10). changes in civilization and human welfare,
Lamb concluded that, generally, warm periods
are beneficial to mankind and cold periods
Before commenting on the specific failings of the harmful. Yet the anthropogenic global warming
IPCC’s Fourth Assessment Report it is important to (AGW) advocates have ignored Lamb’s
clarify popular misunderstandings and myths: conclusions and assert that warm periods are
harmful – without historical reference or
! For about two million years ice ages have been knowledge.
the dominant climate feature, interspersed with
relatively brief warm periods of 10,000 years or
so. Ice-core data clearly show that temperatures
change centuries before concentrations of
atmospheric carbon dioxide change. [Fischer et 2. How Much of Modern Warming Is
al. 1999; Petit, Jouzel et al. 1999] Thus, there is Anthropogenic?
no empirical basis for asserting that changes in
concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide The basic question is: What are the sources of
are the principal cause of past temperature and twentieth-century warming? What fraction is of
climate change. natural origin, a recovery from the preceding Little
Ice Age (LIA), and what fraction is anthropogenic,
! The proposition that changing temperatures e.g., caused by the increase in human-generated GH
cause changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide gases? The answer is all-important when it comes to
concentrations is consistent with experiments policy.
that show carbon dioxide is the atmospheric gas IPCC-AR4 [2007, p. 10] claims “most of the
most readily absorbed by water (including rain) observed increase in global average temperatures
and that cold water can contain more gas than since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the
warm water. The conclusion that falling observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas
temperatures cause falling carbon dioxide concentrations” (emphasis in original). AR4's
concentrations is verified by experiment. authors even assign a better-than-90 percent
Carbon dioxide advocates advance no probability to this conclusion, although there is no
experimentally verified mechanisms explaining sound basis for making such a quantitative
how carbon dioxide concentrations can fall in a judgment. They offer only scant supporting
few centuries without falling temperatures. evidence, none of which stands up to closer
examination. Their conclusion seems to be based on
! Carbon dioxide is a minor greenhouse gas and the peculiar claim that science understands well

2
enough the natural drivers of climate change to rule
them out as the cause of the modern warming.
Therefore, by elimination, recent climate changes
must be human-induced.

! Evidence of warming is not evidence that


the cause is anthropogenic.
It should be obvious, but apparently is not, that
such facts as melting glaciers and disappearing
Arctic sea ice, while interesting, are entirely Figure 1: The ‘hockey stick’ temperature graph was used by
irrelevant to illuminating the causes of warming. the IPCC to argue that the twentieth century was unusually
warm [IPCC-TAR 2001, p.3]. ‘Reconstructed temperatures’ are
Any significant warming, whether anthropogenic or derived from an analysis of various proxy data, mainly tree
natural, will melt ice – often quite slowly. rings; surprisingly, they do not show the Medieval Climate
Therefore, claims that anthropogenic global Optimum and the Little Ice Age, both well-known from historic
records. The ‘observed temperatures’ (in red) are a version of
warming (AGW) is occurring that are backed by the thermometer-based temperature record since the end of
such accounts are simply confusing the the nineteenth century.
consequences of warming with the causes – a
common logical error. In addition, fluctuations of The hockey-stick analysis was beset with
glacier mass depend on many factors other than methodological errors, as has been demonstrated by
temperature, such as the amount of precipitation, McIntyre and McKitrick [2003, 2005] and
and thus they are poor measuring devices for global confirmed by statistics expert Edward Wegman
warming. [Wegman et al. 2006]. A National Academy of
Sciences report [NAS 2006] skipped lightly over the
errors of the hockey-stick analysis and concluded
! The so-called ‘hockey-stick’ diagram of that it showed only that the twentieth century was
warming has been discredited. the warmest in 400 years. But this conclusion is
Another claimed piece of ‘evidence’ for AGW hardly surprising, since the LIA was near its nadir
is the assertion that the twentieth century was 400 years ago, with temperatures at their lowest.
unusually warm, the warmest in the past 1,000 Independent analyses of paleo-temperatures that
years. Compared to IPCC’s Third Assessment do not rely on tree rings have all shown a Medieval
Report [IPCC-TAR 2001], the latest IPCC report no Warm Period (MWP) warmer than current
longer emphasizes the ‘hockey-stick’ analysis by temperatures. For example, we have data from
Mann (Figure 1), which had done away with both Greenland borehole measurements (Figure 2) by
the Medieval Warm Period (MWP) and the Little Dahl-Jensen et al. [1999], various isotope data, and
Ice Age (LIA). an analysis by Craig Loehle [2007] of proxy data,
which excludes tree rings. (Figure 3) Abundant
historical data also confirm the existence of a
warmer MWP [Moore 1995].

3
Greenland Ice-Core Bore Hole Record Prehistoric Temperatures from Proxy Data

Figure 3a: Surface temperatures in the Sargasso Sea (a two


Figure 2: Temperature values from the GRIP ice-core borehole
million square-mile region of the Atlantic Ocean) with time
in Greenland. The top left graph shows the past 100,000 years;
resolution of 50 to 100 years and ending in 1975, as
the dramatic warming ending the most recent glaciation is
determined by isotope ratios of marine organism remains in
clearly visible. The top right graph shows the past 10,000 years
deep-sea sediments [Keigwin 1996]. The horizontal line is the
(the interglacial Holocene); one sees the Holocene Climate
average temperature for this 3,000-year period. The Little Ice
Optimum, a pronounced Medieval Warm Period and Little Ice
Age and the Medieval Climate Optimum were naturally
Age, but an absence of post-1940 warming [Dahl-Jensen et al.
occurring, extended intervals of climate departures from the
1999]. The bottom graph shows the past 2,000 years in greater
mean. A value of 0.25 degrees C, which is the change in
detail.
Sargasso Sea temperature between 1975 and 2006, has been
added to the 1975 data in order to provide a 2006 temperature
value [Robinson et al. 2007].

Figure 3b: Paleo-temperatures from proxy data (with tree rings


! The correlation between temperature and eliminated). Note the Medieval Warm Period is much warmer
than the twentieth century [Loehle 2007]. A slighty corrected
carbon dioxide levels is weak and version is given by Loehle and McCulloch [2008].
inconclusive.

The IPCC cites correlation of global mean


temperature with increases in atmospheric ! Computer models don’t provide evidence
concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the of anthropogenic global warming.
twentieth century to support its conclusion. The
The IPCC has called upon climate models in
argument sounds plausible; after all, CO2 is a GH
support of its hypothesis of AGW. We discuss the
gas and its levels are increasing. However, the
shortcomings of computer models in greater detail
correlation is poor and, in any case, would not prove
below. Here we address the specific claim that the
causation.
global mean surface temperature of the twentieth
The climate cooled from 1940-1975 while CO2
century can be adequately simulated by combining
was rising rapidly (Figures 4a,b). Moreover, there
the effects of GH gases, aerosols, and such natural
has been no warming trend apparent, especially in
influences as volcanoes and solar radiation. Closer
global data from satellites, since about 2001, despite
examination reveals this so-called agreement is little
a continuing rapid rise in CO2 emissions. The UK
more than an exercise in ‘curve fitting’ with the use
Met Office issued a 10-year forecast in August 2007
of several adjustable parameters. (The famed
in which they predict further warming is unlikely
mathematician John von Neumann once said: “Give
before 2009. However, they suggest at least half the
me four adjustable parameters and I can simulate an
years between 2009 and 2014 will be warmer than
elephant. Give me one more and I can make his
the present record set in 1998 [Met Office 2007].
trunk wiggle.”)

4
Global and U.S. Mean Surface Temperatures In an empirical approach, Schwartz [2007] derives
a climate sensitivity that is near the lowest value
quoted by the IPCC, as does Shaviv [2005] by using
a different empirical method.
Cloud feedbacks can be either positive (high
clouds) or negative (low clouds) and are widely
considered to be the largest source of uncertainty in
determining CS [Cess 1990, 1996]. Spencer and
Braswell [2007] find that current observational
diagnoses of cloud feedback could be significantly
biased in a positive direction.
The IPCC undervalues the forcing arising from
changes in solar activity (solar wind and its
magnetic effects) – likely much more important than
the forcing from CO2. Uncertainties for aerosols,
which tend to cool the climate and oppose the GH
effect, are even greater, as the IPCC recognizes in a
table on page 32 of the AR4 report (Figure 5).
An independent critique of the IPCC points to
the arbitrariness of the matching exercise in view of
the large uncertainties of some of these forcings,
Figure 4a: The global mean surface temperature (GMST) of particularly for aerosols [Schwartz, Charlson, Rodhe
the twentieth century. Note the cooling between 1940 and
1975. [NASA-GISS, http://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp/ 2007]. James Hansen, a leading climate modeler,
graphs/]. GMST is subject to uncertain corrections; see text for called attention to our inadequate knowledge of
a discussion of the problems of land and ocean data. The radiative forcing from aerosols when he stated, “the
recent rise in temperatures shown here is suspect and does
not agree with the measured tropospheric temperature trend forcings that drive long-term climate change are not
(see Figure 13) or with the better-controlled US data, shown in known with an accuracy sufficient to define future
Figure 4b.
climate change” [Hansen 1998].
Figure 4b: The 2007 discovery of an error in the handling of
U.S. data has led to a greater amplitude of pre-1940 warming,
which now exceeds the 1998 peak. The Arctic data exhibit a ! Observed and predicted ‘fingerprints’
higher temperature in the 1930s than at present and correlate
well with values of solar irradiance [Soon 2005]. Note the
don’t match.
absence of recent warming and of any post-1998 temperature
trend. Is there a method that can distinguish AGW
from natural warming? The IPCC [IPCC-SAR 1996,
p. 411; IPCC-AR4 2007, p. 668] and many
Current climate models can give a Climate scientists believe the ‘fingerprint’ method is the
Sensitivity (CS) of 1.5º to 11.5º C for a doubling of only reliable one. It compares the observed pattern
atmospheric CO2 [Stainforth et al. 2005; Kiehl of warming with a pattern calculated from GH
2007]. The wide variability is derived mainly from models. While an agreement of such fingerprints
choosing different physical parameters that enter cannot prove an anthropogenic origin for warming,
into the formation and disappearance of clouds. For it would be consistent with such a conclusion. A
example, the values for CS, as given by Stainforth, mismatch would argue strongly against any
involve varying just six parameters out of some 100 significant contribution from GH forcing and
listed in a paper by Murphy et al. [2004]. The values support the conclusion that the observed warming is
of these parameters, many relating to clouds and mostly of natural origin.
precipitation, are simply chosen by ‘expert opinion.’

5
Figure 5: Climate forcings from various sources [IPCC-AR4 2007, p. 32]. Note the large
uncertainties for aerosol forcing, exceeding the values of greenhouse gas forcing. Note also that
solar forcing is based only on total solar irradiance changes and does not consider the effects of
solar wind, solar magnetism, or UV changes.

Climate models all predict that, if GH gases are


driving climate change, there will be a unique
fingerprint in the form of a warming trend
increasing with altitude in the tropical troposphere,
the region of the atmosphere up to about 15
kilometers (Figure 6A). Climate changes due to
solar variability or other known natural factors will
not yield this characteristic pattern; only sustained
greenhouse warming will do so.
The fingerprint method was first attempted in
the IPCC’s Second Assessment Report (SAR)
[IPCC-SAR 1996, p. 411]. Its Chapter 8, titled
“Detection and Attribution,” attributed observed
temperature changes to anthropogenic factors – GH
gases and aerosols. The attempted match of
warming trends with altitude turned out to be
spurious, since it depended entirely on a particular
choice of time interval for the comparison [Michaels
Figure 6: Model-calculated zonal mean atmospheric
& Knappenberger 1996]. Similarly, an attempt to temperature change from 1890 to 1999 (degrees C per
correlate the observed and calculated geographic century) as simulated by climate models from [A] well-mixed
distribution of surface temperature trends [Santer greenhouse gases, [B] sulfate aerosols (direct effects only), [C]
stratospheric and tropospheric ozone, [D] volcanic aerosols, [E]
1996] involved making changes on a published solar irradiance, and [F] all forcings [U.S. Climate Change
graph that could and did mislead readers [Singer Science Program 2006, p. 22]. Note the pronounced increase
1999 p. 9; 2000 pp. 15, 43-44]. In spite of these in warming trend with altitude in figures A and F, which the
IPCC identified as the ‘fingerprint’ of greenhouse forcing.
shortcomings, IPCC-SAR concluded that “the [CCSP 2006]

6
Figure 7: Greenhouse-model-predicted temperature trends Figure 8: By contrast, observed temperature trends versus
versus latitude and altitude; this is figure 1.3F from CCSP latitude and altitude; this is figure 5.7E from CCSP 2006, p.
2006, p. 25, and also appears in Figure 6 of the current report. 116. These trends are based on the analysis of radiosonde
Note the increased temperature trends in the tropical data by the Hadley Centre and are in good agreement with the
mid-troposphere, in agreement also with the IPCC result corresponding US analyses. Notice the absence of increased
[IPCC-AR4 2007, p. 675]. temperature trends in the tropical mid-troposphere.

balance of evidence” supported AGW. report itself documents. It tries to dismiss the
With the availability of higher-quality obvious disagreement shown in the body of the
temperature data, especially from balloons and report by suggesting there might be something
satellites, and with improved GH models, it has now wrong with both balloon and satellite data.
become possible to apply the fingerprint method in Unfortunately, many people do not read beyond the
a more realistic way. This was done in a report summary and have therefore been misled to believe
issued by the U.S. Climate Change Science Program the CCSP report supports anthropogenic warming.
(CCSP) in April 2006 – making it readily available It does not.
to the IPCC for its Fourth Assessment Report – and The same information can also be expressed by
it permits the most realistic comparison of plotting the difference between surface trend and
fingerprints [Karl et al. 2006]. troposphere trend for the models and for the data
The CCSP report is an outgrowth of an NAS [Singer 2001]. As seen in Figure 9a and 9b, the
report “Reconciling Observations of Global models show a histogram of negative values (i.e.
Temperature Change” issued in January 2000 [NAS surface trend less than troposphere trend) indicating
2000]. That NAS report compared surface and that atmospheric warming will be greater than
troposphere temperature trends and concluded they surface warming. By contrast, the data show mainly
cannot be reconciled. Six years later, the CCSP positive values for the difference in trends,
report expands considerably on the NAS study. It is demonstrating that measured warming is occurring
essentially a specialized report addressing the most principally on the surface and not in the atmosphere.
crucial issue in the GW debate: Is current GW The same information can be expressed in yet a
anthropogenic or natural? different way, as seen in research papers by
The CCSP result is unequivocal. While all GH Douglass et al. [2004, 2007], as shown in Figure 10.
models show an increasing warming trend with The models show an increase in temperature trend
altitude, peaking around 10 km at roughly two times with altitude but the observations show the opposite.
the surface value, the temperature data from This mismatch of observed and calculated
balloons give the opposite result: no increasing fingerprints clearly falsifies the hypothesis of
warming, but rather a slight cooling with altitude in anthropogenic global warming (AGW). We must
the tropical zone. See Figures 7 and 8 above, taken conclude therefore that anthropogenic GH gases
directly from the CCSP report. can contribute only in a minor way to the current
The Executive Summary of the CCSP report warming, which is mainly of natural origin.
inexplicably claims agreement between observed The IPCC seems to be aware of this contrary
and calculated patterns, the opposite of what the evidence but has tried to ignore it or wish it away.

7
Model-Observations Disparity of The SPM of IPCC-AR4 [2007, p. 5] distorts the
Temperature Trends key result of the CCSP report: “New analyses of
balloon-borne and satellite measurements of lower-
and mid-tropospheric temperature show warming
rates that are similar to those of the surface
temperature record, and are consistent within their
respective uncertainties, largely reconciling a
discrepancy noted in the TAR.” How is this
possible? It is done partly by using the concept of
‘range’ instead of the statistical distribution shown
in Figure 9a. But ‘range’ is not a robust statistical
measure because it gives undue weight to ‘outlier’
results (Figure 9b). If robust probability
distributions were used they would show an
exceedingly low probability of any overlap of
modeled and the observed temperature trends.
If one takes GH model results seriously, then
the GH fingerprint would suggest the true surface
trend should be only 30 to 50 percent of the
observed balloon/satellite trends in the troposphere.
Figure 9a: Another way of presenting the difference between In that case, one would end up with a much-reduced
temperature trends of surface and lower troposphere; this is
figure 5.4G from CCSP 2006, p. 111. The model results show
surface warming trend, an insignificant AGW
a spread of values (histogram); the data points show balloon effect, and a minor GH warming in the future.
and satellite trend values. Note the model results hardly
overlap with the actual observed trends. (The apparent
deviation of the RSS analysis of the satellite data is as yet
unexplained.)
! The global temperature record is unreliable.
Figure 9b: By contrast, the executive summary of the CCSP It is in fact more likely that the surface data
report presents the same information as Figure 9a in terms of themselves are wrong or that the computer models
‘range’ and shows a slight overlap between modeled and
observed temperature trends [Figure 4G, p. 13]. However, the
are wrong – or both. Several researchers have
use of ‘range’ is clearly inappropriate [Douglass et al. 2007] commented on the difficulty of getting access to
since it gives undue weight to ‘outliers.’ original data, which would permit independent

Figure 10: A more detailed view of the disparity of temperature trends is given in this plot of
trends (in degrees C/decade) versus altitude in the tropics [Douglass et al. 2007]. Models show
an increase in the warming trend with altitude, but balloon and satellite observations do not.

8
verification of the IPCC’s analysis of land surface
temperatures.
Objections to the surface data are too numerous
to elaborate here in detail [see Lo, Yang, Pielke
2007; McKitrick and Michaels 2004, 2007]. They
have been vigorously criticized for failing to
sufficiently control for urban heat-island effects –
the fact that asphalt, buildings, air conditioning
units, and other parts of urban life cause warming of
urban areas that has nothing to do with greenhouse
gases. One study of temperature stations in
California found no warming in rural counties, a
slight warming in suburban counties, and rapid
warming in urban counties (Figure 11). [Goodridge
1996]
Another criticism of the temperature record is
poor geographic distribution and sampling. The
number of stations has varied greatly over time and
has decreased markedly from the 1970s, especially
in Siberia, affecting the homogeneity of the dataset
(Figure 12). Ideally, the models require at least one
measuring point for each 5 degrees of latitude and
longitude – 2,592 grid boxes in all. With the decline
in stations, the number of grid boxes covered also
declined – from 1,200 to 600, a decline in coverage
from 46 percent to 23 percent. Further, the covered
grid boxes tend to be in the more populated areas. Figure 12: The number of (a) global weather stations and (b)
grid boxes [Peterson and Vose 1997]. The top curve (solid)
shows stations providing ‘mean values’; the dashed curve
shows stations supplying ‘max-min’ values. The rise and fall of
covered grid boxes (of 5º x 5º) supplying ‘mean values’ (solid)
and ‘max-min’ values (dashed). Coverage is seen to be rather
poor since the possible number of global grid boxes is 2,592.

An error in the analysis of the NASA-GISS


surface data for the U.S. was discovered recently by
Stephen McIntyre [2007]. As a result, the year 1934
has emerged as the warmest of the twentieth century
for the U.S., and the 1930s as the warmest decade.
Data on sea-surface temperatures (SST) have
increasingly been obtained from buoys and satellites
rather than ships – raising a different set of
problems stemming from inhomogeneous data
sources. Balloon data can overcome some of these
problems, but only satellites provide true global
Figure 11: A demonstration of the ‘urban heat island’ effect: coverage and a homogeneous dataset for the Earth’s
Observed (surface) temperature trends from California weather atmosphere.
stations are shown to depend on population density: (A)
Counties with more than 1 million people, (B) 100k to 1 million, Finally, there is a general question of how to
(C) less than 100k people, respectively [Goodridge 1996]. But define a trend in view of its dependence on the
note that all three [High, Medium, and Low density] show a
temperature rise up to 1940, followed by a pronounced cooling.
choice of an appropriate time interval. This problem
is made more difficult by the occurrence of frequent

9
El Niño warmings and volcanic coolings. warming trend may not be real. The global trend,
For example, it is often stated that the climate derived since 1979 from satellite data, depends very
has warmed in the twentieth century – but without much on the choice of ending date. Figure 13 shows
mentioning that the warming up to 1940, compared the complete satellite data record. One can
to the cool LIA, was almost certainly of natural legitimately conclude there was no warming trend
origin and that there was cooling from 1940 to 1975 prior to 1997, then a small but sudden jump in 1998,
(Figure 4a) when atmospheric CO2 levels were followed by another interval of almost no warming
rapidly increasing. Even the late twentieth-century since 2001.

Global Lower Tropospheric Temperature, 1978-2007

Figure 13: Lower troposphere temperatures versus time from MSU-UAH satellite data. (a) Global; (b) Northern Hemisphere; (c)
Southern Hemisphere; (d) Tropics [20 N-20S]; (e) Land; and (f) Ocean [Christy et al. 2007]. Note the absence of a significant trend
before 1997 and after 1998. Evidently, the calculated linear trend values (in degrees C per decade) depend on the choice of time
interval.

10
! Global warming prior to 1940 was not them well and assigns them to internal oscillations
anthropogenic. of the atmosphere-ocean system. It is significant,
however, that they cannot be forecast by
Most agree that the pre-1940 warming signals a conventional climate models although attempts are
recovery from the Little Ice Age and was not caused being made to incorporate them into climate
by GH gases but by natural factors, amongst which forecasts to improve forecasting skill [Smith 2007;
solar variability was probably most important. Yet Kerr 2007]. On the other hand, these may be merely
the IPCC in 2001 [IPCC-TAR, p. 716] still quoted attempts to provide ‘band-aid’ solutions to explain
a paper that maintains the cause was anthropogenic. the absence of a warming trend since 1998.
That analysis [Wigley et al. 1998] was based on an Tsonis et al. [2007] analyze large-scale
idiosyncratic statistical approach that has been circulation pattern indices, like ENSO, PDO, NAO;
criticized as spurious. [Tsonis and Elsner 1999] they obtain the 1976/77 climate shift as due to a
Another way to show that this analysis is wrong combination of these indices and show a future shift
is to divide the data into pre-1935 and post-1935 around 2035.
periods, and then apply Wigley’s statistical method.
The results for post-1935 correspond to those
derived from an unforced (i.e., no increase in GH ! The role of solar influences on the climate
gases) model calculation. This is contrary to can no longer be neglected.
expectation and also suggests the pre-1935 warming
is not anthropogenic. The IPCC has been disingenuous about solar
influences on the climate. Its first report completely
ignored solar variability. The IPCC began to take
notice only after the pioneering work of Baliunas
Conclusion: The claim that man is the primary
and Jastrow [1990] and the startling correlation
cause of the recent warming is not supported by
between twentieth-century temperature and
science. The scientific evidence cited by the IPCC
solar-cycle length, published by Friis-Christensen
is largely contradicted by observations and
and Lassen [1991]. Even then, IPCC reports have
analysis.
persisted up until now in concentrating on solar-
cycle changes as ‘total solar irradiance’ (TSI),
which are quite small, of the order of 0.1 percent
3. Most of Modern Warming Is Due to [Lean et al. 1995; Willson and Mordvinov 2003].
Natural Causes By disregarding or ignoring the very much larger
changes of solar ultraviolet [Haigh 1996, 2003] or
of the solar wind and its magnetic-field effect on
If human influences on global climate are minor,
cosmic rays and thus on cloud coverage [Svensmark
what are the major influences? There are many
2007a], the IPCC has managed to trivialize the
causes of global climate change, each one
climate effects of solar variability.
prominent depending on the time scale considered.
The AR4 report reduced the IPCC’s already-
On a time scale of decades to centuries, solar
too-low solar impact by about a factor of three so
variability may be the most important factor. There
that it became a mere ~1/13 of the anthropogenic
are also natural oscillations of internal origin,
influence. The IPCC does not discuss or even
especially on a regional scale, that do not appear to
reference basic research papers in this field (by
be connected to human causes either.
Veizer, Shaviv, and, to some extent, Svensmark).
Such an omission is difficult to justify in a report
! Internal oscillations play a major role in that claims to be the most definitive and inclusive
climate change, yet cannot be forecast. assessment of knowledge on climate change.
However, this neglect may no longer be
The most prominent natural climate oscillations acceptable. The demonstration of solar influence on
are the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), Atlantic climate is now overwhelming. One of the prize
Multi-Decadal Oscillation (AMO), Pacific Decadal exhibits is seen in Figure 14 [Neff et al. 2001],
Oscillation (PDO), and the El Niño-Southern which summarizes data obtained from a stalagmite
Oscillation (ENSO). The IPCC report describes from a cave in Oman. The carbon-14 variations are

11
a clear indication of corresponding changes in The best explanation for these observations, and
galactic cosmic rays (GCR), which are modulated similar ones elsewhere, is that – as has long been
by variations in solar activity. The oxygen-18 recognized [Singer 1958] – GCR intensity is
values are proxies for a climate parameter, like modulated by the strength of the solar wind and its
temperature or precipitation, from a shift in the magnetic field. More recently, a detailed mechanism
Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ). The whereby cosmic rays can affect cloudiness and
correlation extends well over 3,000 years, with therefore climate has been suggested and verified
amazingly detailed correspondence. The bottom experimentally by Henrik Svensmark [2007a,b].
graph shows the central 400 years expanded and is More detailed work is to take place under the
accurate on almost a yearly basis, making a CLOUD project proposed by a group of scientists at
cause-effect relationship very likely. CERN, the world’s largest particle accelerator.

Solar Activity and Climate (as seen by proxies)

Figure 14: Values of carbon-14 (produced by cosmic rays – hence a proxy for solar activity)
correlate extremely well with oxygen-18 (climate proxy); data are from a stalagmite in Oman [Neff
2001]. The time interval covers more than 3,000 years, from about 9,600 to 6,200 years before
present (BP). The lower graph shows a particularly well-resolved time interval from 8,350 to 7,900
years BP. It would be difficult to explain this detailed correlation except through the modulation of
galactic cosmic rays by changes in the solar wind and solar magnetic activity [Singer 1958]. The
mechanism whereby cosmic rays influence terrestrial climate is most likely a change in cloudiness,
as suggested by Svensmark [2007a, 2007b].
12
Lockwood and Fröhlich [2007] have claimed a solar ‘dimming’ and post-1985 ‘brightening’ [Wild
divergence between TSI and temperature in the past 2005b; Stanhill 2007]. Existing models do not take
20 years; but this claim is disputed by both solar and account of the existence of water vapor (WV)
climate experts. For example, evidence for climate ‘dimers’ (double H2O molecules) [Paynter et al.
effects of TSI in more recent times is presented by 2007] and their atmospheric absorption of incoming
Scafetta and West [2007], and of solar activity by solar radiation in the near-infrared, which may lead
Usoskin and Kovaltsov [2007]. Shaviv [2002, 2005] to a negative climate feedback as WV concentration
has demonstrated the climate effects of flux increases in the lower troposphere.
variations of Galactic Cosmic Rays on the
hundred-million-year time scale. See also Shaviv
and Veizer [2003]. ! Computer models do not accurately model
There now is little doubt that solar-wind the role of clouds.
variability is a primary cause of climate change on The differences among model results are large
a decadal time scale. Once the IPCC comes to terms and arise mostly from the treatment of clouds and
with this finding, it will have to concede that solar the somewhat arbitrary choices of cloud-related
variability provides a better explanation for 20th parameters, notably, the droplet-size distribution
Century warming than GH effects. Indeed, solar [Senior and Mitchell 1993], which strongly affects
variability may explain the pre-1940 warming and the cloud albedo. Most of the effects of parameter
subsequent cooling period, the MWP and LIA – and variation are caused by a small subset of parameters;
other quasi-periodic climate oscillation with a for example, the choice of entrainment coefficient in
period of roughly 1,500 years, going back a million clouds is associated with 30 percent of the variation
years or more [Singer and Avery 2007]. seen in climate sensitivity [Knight 2007].
Special problems arise from the chaotic nature
of climate. Small changes in initial conditions lead
4. Climate Models Are Not Reliable to vastly different outcomes. To overcome this
well-recognized feature, modelers resort to multiple
runs (‘simulations’), which are later averaged into
In its 2001 report the IPCC admitted, “In climate an ‘ensemble.’ The problem then becomes one of
research and modelling, we should recognise that convergence, especially when the outcomes differ
we are dealing with a coupled non-linear chaotic greatly from each other [Lucarini et al. 2007]. An
system, and therefore that the long-term prediction additional problem arises when trying to average
of future climate states is not possible” [IPCC-TAR over different model ensembles, some based on as
2001, p. 774] Further, as demonstrated in Section 3, many as 10 runs, some only on one run.
the Earth’s climate system is subject to significant, As previously observed, current GH models do
changing influences beyond the Earth itself that are not match the observed latitude distribution of
not well understood and cannot be controlled. temperature trends. In particular, one would expect
Computer models undoubtedly have their place that the production of sulfate aerosols in the
as a way of projecting possible consequences when Northern Hemisphere (NH) should create a reduced
one or more variables are changed. However, warming trend there – or even cooling. The
models do not represent reality, yet the IPCC observations show the opposite.
persists in treating them as if they do. The IPCC and In general, models do not consider realistically
its predecessors have adopted climate sensitivities the lack of geographic homogeneity of forcing,
(for a doubling of CO2) of 1.5º to 4.5º C. But actual especially for aerosols. Polar trends do not agree
model results exceed these ‘canonical’ limits in both with model expectations and can more easily be
minimum and maximum; some model results range explained with solar forcing [Soon 2005]. Models
up to 11º C. reviewed by the IPCC do not employ realistic
growth figures for the GH gas methane
! Computer models do not consider solar [Dlugokencky 1998] and do not consider the
dimming and brightening. resultant forcings caused by future changes in the
stratosphere from increases in water vapor and
Current models do not consider the observed ozone depletion [Singer 1971; Shindell 2001].

13
Held and Soden [2006] clearly show that, for Negative Feedbacks from Water Vapor
the computer models used in AR4, atmospheric WV
increases with surface temperature according to the
Clausius-Clapeyron (CC) equation; precipitation
and evaporation increase at a rate significantly less
than the CC relationship. However, satellite
observations suggest that actual precipitation
increased twice as fast as models predict [Wentz et
al. 2007], indicating the potential of global warming
to cause drought may be less than has been feared.

! Computer models do not simulate a


possible negative feedback from water
vapor.
The models also have problems describing the
latitude and altitude distribution of water vapor. In Figure 15: The cartoon suggests that drying of the upper
particular, the values of upper-troposphere (UT) troposphere would lead to a negative feedback reducing the
effects of increasing CO2. The (purple) broad band shows the
water vapor control the heat loss to space and atmospheric infrared emission into space (outgoing long-wave
thereby exert an all-important control on the Earth’s radiation – OLR). The upper boundary corresponds to a dry
upper troposphere (UT); the lower boundary corresponds to a
surface temperature. Measurements may give mean moist UT. The peaked red band shows emission from the
values of UT water vapor; but since emission varies surface into space through the atmospheric window (8 to 12
as the fourth power of temperature, one cannot microns). To keep total OLR constant, the lower boundary of
this band would correspond to a dry UT, while the upper
thereby deduce the average value of outgoing boundary would correspond to a moist UT. This change in
long-wave radiation (OLR). infrared emission from the surface suggests a corresponding
Since water vapor (WV) is the most important temperature change – which ultimately reduces the warming
from increased levels of CO2.
atmospheric greenhouse gas, it is difficult to explain
in simple terms how it can also act to produce a
negative feedback, i.e., to reduce the presumed
warming effects of CO2. In fact, current GH models roughly balance the incoming absorbed solar
all incorporate a positive feedback from an increase radiation. In the case of a moist UT, more of the
in WV. OLR radiation will originate from the Earth’s
However, Richard Lindzen [1990] and others surface; in the case of a dry UT the opposite is true.
[Ellsaesser 1984] have pointed to ways whereby Therefore, a dry UT corresponds to a warmer
WV can produce a negative rather than a positive surface; a moist UT corresponds to a cooler surface:
feedback. It requires a mechanism for reducing the Hence the distribution of WV can produce a
concentration of WV in the upper troposphere (UT). negative feedback – provided the increasing CO2
Empirical evidence seems to support such a causes a particular distribution of WV.
distribution of UTWV [Spencer et al. 2007].
The negative feedback mechanism works as
follows [see Figure 15]: With normal values of ! Computer models do not explain many
UTWV, IR emission into space (called the outgoing features of the Earth’s observed climate.
long-wave radiation – OLR) takes place at the low Models overestimate the land surface insolation,
temperature of the UT. But if the UT is dry, then the (the amount of solar radiation striking the surface)
OLR emission from WV bands originates from the when compared to a dataset of 760
much warmer boundary layer in the lower worldwide-distributed surface stations from the
troposphere (LT). The emission from the surface Global Energy Balance Archive [Wild 2005a]. The
takes place in the atmospheric window (between 8 discrepancy is 9 watts per square meter (W/m2) on
to 12 microns) and depends on the temperature of average, several times the estimated GH forcing. It
the surface, which radiates as a black body. suggests uncertainties in partitioning of solar energy
Note, however, that the total value of OLR must between surface and atmospheric absorption.

14
Figure 16: A result from the U.S. National Assessment of Climate Change [NACC 2000]: Expected precipitation
for 18 regions of the United States, according to the Hadley model and Canadian model. Note the huge differences
between the two model results in magnitude and even in sign. For example, the Dakotas (Souris - Red - Rainy) can
turn either into a swamp or into a desert, depending on which climate model is used.

Beyond this, the GH models do not explain system” [Shukla 2007]. Kriplani et al. [2003]
many other features of Earth’s observed climate. conclude that the Indian Monsoon shows decadal
For instance, the history of polar temperatures, the variability with about 30-year cycles of above-and-
cooling trend of the Antarctic, the seesaw effect of below-normal rainfall and is not affected by global
Northern Hemisphere/Southern Hemisphere linked warming at this time.
to ocean circulation, and features such the observed
Madden-Julian Oscillation in the tropics, the North
Atlantic Oscillation, the Atlantic Multi-decadal ! Computer models cannot produce reliable
Oscillation [Schlesinger and Ramankutty 1994], the predictions of regional climate change.
Pacific Decadal Oscillation [Mantua 1997], and El
Computer models are notoriously inadequate in
Niño occurrences.
simulating or projecting regional effects,
In general, climate models do rather poorly in
particularly when it comes to precipitation. This fact
predicting precipitation, particularly on a regional
can be demonstrated most clearly in the
level (see, for example, Figure 16). Nor have they
U.S.-National Assessment of Climate Change report
been successful in predicting such major climate
[NACC 2000] that used both the Hadley model and
phenomena as ENSO or the Indian Monsoon.
Canadian model to project future changes for 18
“Climate models are woefully inadequate to
regions of the United States. As can be seen from
simulate and predict Asian summer Monsoon
Figure 16, in about half the regions the two models
precipitation. The Asian summer Monsoon is the
gave opposite results. For example, the Dakotas
largest single abnormality in the global climate

15
would become either a desert or a swamp by 2100, some physics that was plain wrong. The
depending on the model chosen. It is significant that ‘phenomenon’ was hyped by the popular press,
the U.S.-NACC report failed to meet the tests of the endorsed by a National Academy of Sciences panel,
Information Quality Act [2004] and was withdrawn and taken quite seriously by government agencies,
from official government report status. including the Pentagon. It is now being resurrected
While useful in experiments to study the in an ‘improved’ form [Robock 2007], but with the
sensitivity of changes in climate parameters, same problems as the original version.
computer models are unsuited for predictions of
future climate. Kevin Trenberth, a lead author of the Conclusion: The climate models used by the IPCC
IPCC-TAR report, recently wrote [Trenberth 2007]: do not depict the chaotic, open-ended climate
system. They cannot make reliable predictions and
In fact there are no predictions by IPCC at all. should not be used in formulating government
And there never have been. The IPCC instead policy.
proffers ‘what if’ projections of future climate
that correspond to certain emissions scenarios.
There are a number of assumptions that go into
these emissions scenarios. They are intended to 5. The Rate of Sea-Level Rise Is
cover a range of possible self consistent ‘story Unlikely to Increase
lines’ that then provide decision makers with
information about which paths might be more
desirable. But they do not consider many things Sea level (SL) rise is one of the most feared impacts
like the recovery of the ozone layer, for of any future global warming, but public discussion
instance, or observed trends in forcing agents. of the problem is beset by poor data and extremely
There is no estimate, even probabilistically, as misleading analysis.
to the likelihood of any emissions scenario and Eminent practitioners in the field have termed
no best guess. Even if there were, the
current estimates of SL rise a “puzzle’ [Douglas and
projections are based on model results that
provide differences of the future climate relative Peltier 2002], an “enigma” [Munk 2002], and even
to that today. “fiction” [Mörner 2004].
There is neither an El Niño sequence nor
any Pacific Decadal Oscillation that replicates
the recent past; yet these are critical modes of ! Estimates of recent sea-level rise are
variability that affect Pacific Rim countries and unreliable.
beyond. The Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation,
that may depend on the thermohaline circulation Most discussion, including that of the IPCC, is
and thus ocean currents in the Atlantic, is not set formulated in terms of global average sea level.
up to match today’s state, but it is a critical Even assuming this statistic can be estimated
component of the Atlantic hurricanes, and it accurately (see further comments below), it has little
undoubtedly affects forecasts for the next practical policy value. Local relative sea-level
decade from Brazil to Europe. (LRSL) change is all that counts for purposes of
The starting climate state in several of the coastal planning, and this is highly variable
models may depart significantly from the real
worldwide, depending upon the differing rates at
climate owing to model errors. I postulate that
regional climate change is impossible to deal which particular coasts are undergoing tectonic
with properly unless the models are initialized. uplift or subsidence. There is no meaningful global
average for LRSL [Douglas 2001].
The ‘nuclear winter’ episode of 1983-84 At one of the allegedly most endangered sites,
represents a good example of how global climate the Maldives, condemned to disappear soon into the
models can give false results and mislead the public sea, both satellite altimetry and tide-gauge records
and even many experts. Ideologically driven, the have not registered any significant SL rise. Contrary
‘nuclear-winter’ hypothesis relied on a model to IPCC expectations, sea level there fell by 20 to
calculation that used artificial assumptions designed 30 cm in the past 30 years [Mörner 2004].
to give the desired result, incomplete physics that Certain observational features stand out.
neglected important atmospheric processes, and also According to abundant and varied geological data,
sea level has risen by about 120 meters snce the

16
Sea Level Since Last Glacial Maximum

Figure 17: Sea-level rise since the Last Glacial Maximum, as deduced from coral and
peat data [Toscano & Macintyre 2003]. The total rise since 18,000 years before present
(BP) is about 120 meters. Note the rapid rate of rise as continental ice sheets melted and
the more modest and nearly constant rate of rise in the past several millennia –
irrespective of global temperature fluctuations. The graph is best understood by reading
from the lower right (sea level 18,000 years before present) to the upper left (present sea
level).

Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) 18,000 years ago Sea Level 1900-1980
[Fairbanks 1989]. Coral data also show a roughly
uniform rate of rise during past centuries [Toscano
& Macintyre 2003] (Figure 17). The best tide-gauge
data show a fairly uniform rate of rise of about 1.8
mm per year during most of the past century [Trupin
and Wahr 1990, Douglas 2001] in spite of warming
and cooling (Figure 18). Satellite data have shown
a higher rate of rise in the past 20 years [Cazenave
and Nerem 2004], but the temporal and geographic
variability is so large that the applicability of the
data has not been generally accepted.
Some analyses [Holgate 2006] even suggest a
slowdown in the rate of SL rise during the latter half
of the twentieth century. We may conclude,
therefore, that there has been an insignificant Figure 18: Sea-level (SL) values for 84 tidal-gauge stations
amount of acceleration, if any, in SL rise since 1900 with more than 37 years of data [Trupin and Wahr 1990]. They
– in spite of temperature changes. This conclusion have been corrected for post-glacial rebound. The average rate
of rise is ~18 cm per century. Note absence of any acceleration
is completely at variance with that of the IPCC, yet in SL rise during warming intervals. While satellite data
it is supported by many independent researchers [Cazenave and Nerem 2004] suggest a higher rate of rise, an
analysis by Holgate [2006] shows a lower rate in recent years.
[Douglas 2001].

17
! ‘Bottoms-up’ modeling of future sea levels
does not uniformly predict rising sea
levels.
The four IPCC reports have all used a
‘bottoms-up’ modeling analysis of global average
change in sea level. They estimate separately the
positive contribution to SL rise from melting
mountain glaciers (eustatic) and thermal expansion
of a warming ocean (steric). Obviously, this holds
only for the upper ocean layer as icy-cold deep-sea
water is neither increasing in temperature nor would
expand if warmed. They then add the estimated net
values (ice loss minus ice accumulation) for the
Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets.
The observed lack of acceleration of SL Figure 19: Estimates of sea-level rise to Year 2100 from IPCC
reports of 1990, 1995, 2001, and 2007. Note the strong
(Figures 17 and 18) may indicate a fortuitous yet reduction in estimated maximum rise, presumably based on
plausible balance, in which ice accumulation on the better data and understanding. Also shown are the published
seal level rise values of Hansen (H) [2006], Rahmstorf (R)
Antarctic plateau roughly balances the effects of [2007], and Singer (S) [1997]. Both H and R are well outside of
expanding ocean and melting glaciers for the maximum IPCC values. The ongoing rate of rise in recent
short-lived (decades-long) global temperature centuries has been 18 cm per century; therefore, the
incremental rate of rise for IPCC 2007 would be 0 to 41 cm,
changes [Singer 1997, p. 18]. This is plausible and about 0 to 2 cm for Singer.
because a warming ocean releases more moisture
into the atmosphere, which increases precipitation
and ice accumulation, mainly over the Antarctic
! Forecasts of more rapid sea-level rise are
continent. If true, sea level would continue to not credible.
increase at about the same rate – roughly 18 cm per
century – in spite of temperature changes of short Recently, Stefan Rahmstorf [2007] has
duration, measured in decades, whether warming or published a ‘top down’ approach to SL-rise
cooling. prediction that exceeds the current IPCC estimates
about threefold. He simply assumes the rate of rise
is proportional to global mean temperature. There is
! Each successive IPCC report forecasts a no theoretical basis to support this assumption – and
smaller sea-level rise. indeed, it is contradicted by observational evidence:
Successive IPCC reports have reduced their SL rise continued at the same rate even when the
estimates of projected sea-level rise, as shown in climate was cooling from 1940 to 1975. As Nobel
Figure 19, and are coming closer to a value of 18 physicist Wolfgang Pauli once said when
cm per century. Because this is also close to the confronted with a similar silliness, “This theory is
ongoing rate of rise, this is equivalent to saying worthless; it isn’t even wrong.”
there will be no acceleration by AGW, i.e., no Hansen [2006] has suggested even more
additional sea-level rise due to warming. extreme estimates of future SL rise – nearly 15 (or
There is, however, another problem: The IPCC even 60) times the mean IPCC value and 30 (or
figures do not match the observed rate of rise even 120) times that of Singer. His 20-feet estimate
[IPCC-AR4 2007, Table TS.3, p. 50]. Most of the is based on speculation about the short-term fate of
ongoing SL rise may therefore be due to the slow polar ice sheets, assuming a sudden collapse and
melting of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) melting; his 80-feet estimate is derived by
[Conway 1999]. It has been slowly melting since the comparison with previous interglacials. However,
LGM of 18,000 years ago. If it continues at this the MWP and the much greater warmings during the
rate, it will disappear in about 7,000 years earlier Holocene showed no evidence of such
[Bindschadler 1998] – unless another ice age imagined catastrophes. Hansen and Rahmstorf can
commences. therefore be considered ‘contrarians’ on this issue.

18
It is likely that actual SL observations within b; Singer 2006]. Peter Minnett [2006] believes his
the next few years will show such extreme estimates data show that all of the DWR energy contributes to
to be wrong. It is ironic that Hansen, Rahmstorf, and sea surface temperature (SST); others are less sure.
some others have attacked the IPCC as being too One doesn’t see any way of answering these
conservative [Rahmstorf et al. 2007] and relying on questions definitively, except perhaps by direct
consensus [Oppenheimer et al. 2007]. measurements under different conditions of sea state
and surface ripples.
One would measure the DWR, the upwelling IR
from the skin, and the detailed temperature
6. Do Anthropogenic Greenhouse distribution just below the skin, and record the
Gases Heat the Oceans? changes as the amount of DWR varies. Since we
cannot wait for a change in CO2, we could measure
In 2005, Hansen announced he had found the the effect of a cloud or other IR-emitting surface on
‘smoking gun’ for anthropogenic warming by our experimental setup.
comparing the published increasing rate of ocean
heat storage (during a selected time period) with an Energy Inputs to Sea Surface
assumed energy imbalance at the top of the
atmosphere [Hansen 2005]. There are many things
wrong with this analysis.
Obviously, sea surface temperature (SST) has to
increase before heat can be stored in the deep ocean.
We know SST increased pre-1940, thus presumably
adding stored heat to the ocean, yet few really
believe the cause of that warming was
anthropogenic, because it occurred well before the
large-scale use of fossil fuels. Hansen’s analysis has
been additionally invalidated by the finding that the
heat storage data are over-estimated by a large
factor [Gouretski and Koltemann 2007] and by
recent observations that heat storage stopped
increasing in the past few years [Lyman 2006, Figure 20: Cartoon showing the absorption of downwelling
Willis 2007]. infrared radiation (from greenhouse gases and clouds) within
a ~10-micron ‘skin’ of the ocean. It is not known how much of
A more fundamental issue is the degree to this greenhouse energy contributes to sea surface
which greenhouse effects contribute to SST. temperature, and how much goes into re-radiation and
evaporation. Note the buoys are located in the warmest part of
According to basic physics, the ‘complex refractive the ‘mixed layer’ of the ocean; therefore, the increasing
index’ of water in the infrared (IR) region results in admixture of buoy data since 1980 could result in a calculated
IR radiation being absorbed within a thickness of rise of sea surface temperature that is an artifact of the data
handling procedure.
the order of only 10 microns. However, the GH
effect depends on IR radiation, downwelling from
the atmosphere towards the surface, being absorbed, In response to the claim that the observed rise in
and then adding to the normal heating by the Sun’s ocean temperatures provides an empirical solution
visible radiation (Figure 20). But if this to this problem, we must consider the possibility
downwelling radiation (DWR), emanating from that the observed temperature rise is partly an
atmospheric GH gases and from clouds, is artifact of the method of measurement. As
completely absorbed in the ‘skin’ of the ocean, what previously observed, in the past 25 years, drifter
happens to the absorbed energy? How much is buoys have become predominant in supplying SST
re-radiated? How much is used to increase data. But they measure temperatures within a few
evaporation? centimeters of the surface, where solar heating is a
The problem is to find out how much of the maximum (during the day) whereas ships (the
energy is transmitted to the bulk layer beneath the previous method of measuring ocean temperatures)
skin in order to help warm the ocean [Singer 2005a, measure temperatures a few meters below the

19
surface, where it is colder. (See Figure 20 for an ! Past trends in atmospheric levels of CO2
illustration of the different measurement techniques are poorly understood and controversial.
in use.) One can readily show that combining ship
data with a growing amount of buoy data likely Zbigniew Jaworowski [1994, 1992] has
leads to a fictitious temperature rise [Singer 2006]. repeatedly pointed to the unreliability of ice-core
Finally, we must deal with the fact that as SST data to establish pre-1958 CO2 concentrations, thus
increases, evaporation increases even more rapidly creating doubt about the magnitude of the human
– setting effective upper limits to SST values contribution to the current atmospheric CO2
[Priestley 1996, Held & Soden 2006, Wentz et al. concentration.
2007]. But which temperature should one use: SST Ernst-Georg Beck, by assembling more than
(as climate models calculate) or the generally cooler 90,000 pre-1958 measurements of atmospheric CO2
‘skin’? Empirically, the situation is complicated dating back to the nineteenth century, has shown
since rate of evaporation depends also on the rather large variations, including a major increase
relative humidity of the overlying atmosphere, coincident with a rise in ocean temperatures from
surface winds and sea state, and the occurrence of 1920 to 1940 [Beck 2007]. Others have disputed the
precipitation. significance of these measurements; the issue has
Nowhere does the IPCC discuss these problems not yet been fully resolved.
in any detail or offer any suggestions for their On the other hand, the observed latitudinal
solution. Yet it is clearly of fundamental importance distribution of CO2, and its development over time,
to know what fraction of the greenhouse effect as seen by CO2 monitoring stations around the
contributes to ocean heating – not least because world, provide important evidence for a substantial
oceans cover 70 percent of the Earth’s surface. human component of CO2 growth. Figure 21 shows
CO2 concentrations are highest in the Northern
Hemisphere, with the seasonal cycle diminishing in
amplitude in the Southern Hemisphere, as would be
7. How Much Do We Know About expected. But the secular increase of the cycle’s
Carbon Dioxide in the Atmosphere? amplitude points to an expansion of the biosphere –
presumably as the result of CO2 fertilization.
What fraction of carbon dioxide from human Measurements of increased ocean acidity give
activities contributes to the observed increase in us little additional information about the sources of
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and how much CO2 increases. Although higher concentrations of
ends up in poorly understood sinks? What fraction carbon dioxide reduce the pH of the ocean to some
is contributed by a warming ocean and what fraction degree, it still remains slightly alkaline; pH values
is absorbed by an expanding biosphere? range from 8.2 (in the Norwegian Sea of the North
Unknown outgassing associated with a warmer Atlantic) to 7.9 (in the Eastern Pacific and Arabian
ocean, changing exchange between the surface Sea) [Doney 2006]. There seems no imminent
layers and the deep ocean (where carbon is locked danger of impact on shell formation by marine
up for thousands of years), unknown biosphere creatures. The much-feared effects on coral growth
uptake in a warmer climate – all contribute are not supported by actual data. [Lough & Barnes
uncertainties as to future scenarios of atmospheric 1997; Fine & Tchernov 2007]
CO2 concentration. The observed increase over time in the
The real policy question, then, is this: Can the amplitude of the seasonal CO2 cycle suggests that
rate of increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration be CO2 fertilization is expanding the biosphere and
explained with sufficient accuracy, taking account thus creating a negative feedback, as will be
of the various sources and sinks and the discussed below. The IPCC report also lacks a
uncertainties associated with them, to predict the thorough discussion of the data necessary to analyze
effects of mandated reductions in anthropogenic GH this issue. It mentions [IPCC-AR4 2007, p. 139] the
emissions? great uncertainty (between 6 percent and 39 percent)
It is interesting that relatively little attention has in the contribution to CO2 growth rate from land-use
been paid to the control of GH gases, like N2O and changes.
CH4, that are not related to industrial growth. Isotopic information on carbon-13 appears to be
adequate to resolve the problem [Marchitto 2005,

20
Figure 21: CO2 levels versus latitude and time [http://www.cmdl.noaa.gov/ccgg]. The level of atmospheric
CO2 is color-coded to the ordinate scale. Data come from the marine boundary layer. Note the latitude
variation, indicating a CO2 source in the Northern Hemisphere. Note the increase in the amplitude of the
seasonal variation, suggesting an increase in terrestrial biomass.

Boehm 2002]. Similarly, the measured decrease in to 1945 (reflecting the global economic depression),
atmospheric oxygen over time [Keeling 1992, 1996] rose to 4.3 percent during the recovery from 1945 to
not only verifies that fossil fuels have been burned 1975, and finally slowed once again to 1.2 percent
but clarifies some of the details of the CO2 budget. a year in the period from 1975 to 2000, reflecting
Figure 22 shows trends in global emissions of the spread of more energy-efficient technologies.
CO2 from use of fossil fuels from 1850 to 2000. Figure 23 compares changes in human CO2
Emissions grew at an annual rate of 4.4 percent
from 1850 to 1915, slowed to 1.3 percent from 1915

Figure 23: The year-to-year increase of CO2 vs. time. The bar
Figure 22: Growth of CO2 emissions (in megatons per year of graph shows an increase in the atmospheric levels, an irregular
carbon) from fossil fuels [Marland 2007]. The top curve gives pattern that correlates well with El Niño warming events and
the total values and growth rates as shown. Note the rapid rise volcanic cooling events. Yet the release of CO2 from fossil-fuel
of oil use and then natural gas. Note also that the vertical scale burning (upper curve) increases smoothly [IPCC 2007, p. 516].
is logarithmic; an exponential rise in emission therefore will Presumably, there are strong temperature-dependent
appear to be ‘linear.’ variations in the CO2 absorption of the ocean.

21
emissions to changes in atmospheric CO2 since suggested there must be a strong carbon sink in the
1960. The fraction of emissions retained in the Northern Hemisphere, and that the tropics are a net
atmosphere varies considerably and seems to carbon source. There is some evidence, considered
correlate with ocean temperature, El Niño controversial, from detailed CO2 data [Fan 1998]
warmings, and the coolings from volcanic eruptions. that North America is a net carbon sink [IPCC-AR4
2007, p. 523]. However, Stephens [2007] reports
that global vertical distributions of CO2 in the
! Carbon dioxide sources and sinks are atmosphere are not consistent with that
poorly understood. interpretation but are more consistent with models
that show a smaller NH carbon sink and possibly
Present carbon-cycle models rely on unknown strong carbon uptake in the tropics.
sinks to explain recent trends. Presumably, these
additional sinks were not operating prior to
industrialization and have emerged as a ! The role of oceans as CO2 sources and
consequence of the increasing atmospheric sinks is a major source of uncertainty.
concentration. In the future, will these ‘missing
sinks’ amplify or diminish the human contribution The role played by a warming ocean seems to
to atmospheric CO2? be unquestioned. The solubility of CO2 in water
It is conventionally assumed that the difference decreases with increasing temperature – roughly by
between emitted anthropogenic CO2 and the 4 percent per degree C. Therefore, the ability of a
measured increase must be absorbed in ocean, soils, warming ocean to absorb CO2 diminishes – or
and biosphere or partly buffered in the upper mixed conversely, a warming ocean will give up CO2 to a
ocean. Yet there are few data to support this and the warming atmosphere. Observationally, ice-core data
literature talks about an unidentified ‘carbon sink’ show that atmospheric CO2 increases followed (did
– renamed as ‘residual land sink’ [IPCC-AR4 2007, not precede) the rapid warmings of past
p. 26]. Recent speculation assigns this sink to deglaciations [Fischer 1999] by many centuries –
tropical forests. although the increased CO2 may well operate in a
The observed increase in the seasonal change of feedback loop and contribute to further warming.
CO2 concentration suggests increasing uptake by an The details of this process are rather
expanding biosphere and the upper mixed ocean complicated. The IPCC does not discuss it beyond
buffer. Unknown outgassing associated with a mentioning that CO2 is absorbed in the colder parts
warmer ocean, changing exchange between the of the ocean and may be released from upwelling
surface layers and the deep ocean (where carbon is water in the warmer parts. A proper treatment
locked up for thousands of years), unknown requires knowing the detailed temperature
biosphere uptake in a warmer and wetter climate, distribution of the ocean in latitude and longitude. It
increasing decay of biomass, as well as some must take into account ocean circulation and how
outgassing of (permafrost) soils, etc., all lead to this brings CO2-rich colder water to the surface. It
uncertainties in future values of atmospheric CO2 also involves knowing the degree of saturation of
concentration. ocean masses as a function of time and the thickness
Less than half of the CO2 emitted by fossil-fuel of the mixed layer, likely a function of surface
burning remains in the atmosphere; the rest is winds and sea state.
absorbed by the ocean or incorporated by the The rate of CO2 uptake by the ocean depends on
terrestrial biosphere in roughly equal measures the difference between the partial pressure of CO2 in
[Baker 2007]. In order to understand the relative the atmosphere and the pressure that would exist if
role of different parts of the terrestrial biosphere as the ocean and the atmosphere were at equilibrium.
carbon sinks, global measurements of atmospheric Le Quere [2007] reports that the rate of uptake by
CO2 concentration must be interpreted by the Southern Ocean, one of the most important
‘inversion’ models to determine how uptake, CO2-absorbing regions, has slowed relative to what
emission, and transport contribute to the seasonal would be expected based solely on how fast the
and regional differences. concentration of atmospheric CO2 has risen since
Previous studies [IPCC-AR4 2007, p. 522] have 1981. They attribute this shortfall to an increase in
windiness over the Southern Ocean, conveniently

22
blamed on global warming. The authors predict this climate:
relative trend will continue.
Uncertainty in predictions of anthropogenic
Conclusion: While, evidently, there are still many climate change arises at all stages of the
unknowns about CO2 lifetimes, sources, and sinks, modelling process described in Section 10.1.
The specification of future emissions of
the overwhelming uncertainty is not in the science
greenhouse gases, aerosols and their precursors
but in the emission scenarios that depend on many is uncertain (e.g. Nakicenovic and Swart, 2000).
socio-economic assumptions. It is then necessary to convert these emissions
into concentrations of radiatively active species,
calculate the associated forcing and predict the
response of climate system variables such as
8. The Effects of Human Carbon Dioxide surface temperature and precipitation (Figure
Emissions Are Benign 10.1). At each step, uncertainty in the true signal
of climate change is introduced by errors in the
Answers to questions regarding where CO2 comes representation of Earth system processes in
models (e.g., Palmer et al. 2005) and by internal
from and where it goes are of obvious importance in
climate variability (e.g., Selten et al., 2004). ...
predicting more accurately the effectiveness of Such limitations imply that distribution of future
controls on human CO2 emissions. But they are not climate responses from ensemble simulations
nearly as important as knowledge of future are themselves subject to uncertainty... [p. 797]
consumption of fossil fuels or the likely effects of
higher CO2 concentrations on the planet’s plants and
wildlife. The IPCC grossly exaggerates the long-term
Regarding the former, there is reason to believe (though not the short-term) increase in emissions
the IPCC has exaggerated future emission trends, from poor countries. It does so by converting Gross
invalidating the temperature projections that rest on Domestic Product estimates for wealthy and poor
the accuracy of those emission scenarios. Regarding countries into a common currency (U.S. dollars)
the latter, there is clear and compelling evidence using market exchange rates instead of purchasing
that higher levels of CO2, even if accompanied by power parity. This method overstates the baseline
higher temperatures and changes in precipitation, income disparity. Because the IPCC projects that
would, on balance, be more beneficial than harmful. poor nations will catch up to or even surpass
wealthy nations in per-capita income by the end of
the century, the inflated disparity in starting
! The IPCC’s estimates of future positions means much greater economic activity
anthropogenic CO2 emissions are too high. must take place, and more greenhouse gas emissions
would be released into the atmosphere.
The IPCC used essentially the same The assumption that poor countries would grow
methodology for producing emission scenarios in its as fast as the IPCC predicts is entirely implausible
AR4 as it did for TAR, a methodology that was and would be unprecedented in the history of the
vigorously critiqued by Ian Castles and David world. For example, the IPCC predicts all of Asia
Henderson in 2003 for containing basic errors in would increase real incomes by a factor of 70 to 1,
economics and the handling of economic statistics, whereas incomes even in fast-growing Japan
excluding from consideration relevant published increased by ‘only’ a factor of 20 to 1 in the
sources, and excluding economists from its writing twentieth century. According to even the most
and peer review processes [Castles and Henderson conservative story lines used by the IPCC,
2003; Henderson 2005]. per-capita GDP in the U.S. in 2100 would be
For AR4 [2007], the IPCC ran computer surpassed by Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, North
simulations for one scenario that appeared in TAR Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong, Libya,
(A2) and two new scenarios (B1 and A1B) [IPCC- Algeria, Tunisia, and Argentina [Castles and
AR4 p. 761]. The IPCC frankly admits in the body Henderson 2003].
of AR4, though not in the SPM, that there is
considerable uncertainty about the reliability of all
of these scenarios and their possible effects on

23
Figure 24: Phanerozoic CO2: CO2 concentrations for the past 600 million years, in parts per million (left)
and as multiples (up to a factor ~20) of current concentration (right). The past 400,000-year period is
squeezed into a thin sliver on the left. Dots represent data, and lines represent various models [Hayden
2007]. Note the significant downard trend in CO2 levels in the past 200 million years.

! Higher concentrations of CO2 would be surface, and to open those pores less widely
beneficial to plant and animal life. [Woodward 1987; Morison 1987]. Both of these
changes tend to reduce most plants’ rates of water
An extensive scholarly literature documents the loss by transpiration, making them better able to
fact that increases in CO2 give rise to many changes withstand drought conditions [Tuba et al. 1998],
that are beneficial. In the geologic past, CO2 levels enabling terrestrial vegetation to begin to win back
have been many times higher than present values lands previously lost to desertification [Idso and
(Figure 24) and have sustained a large flora and Quinn 1983].
fauna [Berner 1997;Berner and Kothaualla 2001; Atmospheric CO2 enrichment, finally, helps
IPCC-AR4 2007, p. 441]. plants cope with the negative effects of a number of
Plants use CO2 to produce the organic matter other environmental stresses, including high soil
out of which they construct their tissues. Higher salinity, high air temperature, low light intensity,
levels of CO2 in the air enable plants to grow bigger, low levels of soil fertility [Idso and Idso 1994], low
produce more branches and leaves, expand their temperature stress [Boese et al. 1997], oxidative
root systems, and produce more flowers and fruit stress [Badiani et al. 1997], and the stress of
[Idso 1989]. Laboratory experiments show that a herbivory (insect and animal grazing) [Gleadow et
300 ppm increase in the CO2 content typically raises al. 1998].
the productivity of most herbaceous plants by about Concerns have been raised that coral reefs could
one-third [Kimball 1983; Idso 1992]. Some 176 be harmed by rising CO2 emissions through a
experiments on trees and other woody plants reveal CO2-induced acidification of the world’s oceans.
a mean growth enhancement of 48 percent for a 300 But a study of calcification rates of Porites coral
ppm increase in atmospheric CO2 content [Poorter colonies on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef (GBR)
1993; Ceulemans and Mousseau 1994; Wullschleger found “the 20th century has witnessed the second
et al. 1995, 1997]. highest period of above-average calcification in the
Higher levels of CO2 cause plants to produce past 237 years” [Lough and Barnes 1997]. Research
fewer leaf stomatal pores per unit area of leaf by the same authors has found GBR calcification

24
rates were linearly related to average annual sea ! Higher concentrations of CO2 are not
surface temperature, such that “a 1ºC rise in average responsible for weather extremes, storms,
annual SST increased average annual calcification or hurricanes.
by 0.39 g cm-2y-1.”
Warmer ocean temperatures are likely to According to the IPCC, “It is very likely that
increase coral reef calcification “due to an hot extremes, heat waves, and heavy precipitation
enhancement in coral metabolism and/or increases events will continue to become more frequent”
in photosynthetic rates of their symbiotic algae” [IPCC-AR4 2007, SPM, p.12]. This argument is
[McNeil et al. 2004]. This biologically driven expanded on in the main report. The phrase
process may account for the ability of coral to “continue to become more frequent” implies that
survive major changes in temperature over the these events have already become more frequent.
course of millions of years. But have they?
The evident survival of polar bears and other Hall [2007] has reviewed climate data for the 50
species, of polar ice sheets and glaciers, and of U.S. states; his chart of the number of record-high
corals, all demonstrate that warmer temperatures temperatures by year goes back to 1884 (Figure 25).
have not been catastrophic, as many seem to fear. In The chart shows 25 extreme high temperature
contrast, a markedly colder climate would certainly records set in 1934 and 29 in 1936, but none in
be harmful. Were a warmer climate also to be 2001, 2003, 2004, or 2005. There is no evidence
harmful, then logic would seem to dictate that the from U.S. records that extreme high temperatures
present climate is optimal – an unlikely occurrence. are on the increase.
Heat waves in Europe can almost entirely be
explained by more frequent occurrence of

Figure 25: Extreme high-temperature values recorded, by state, in the United States since 1880 [Hart
2007]. Note the peaking around 1940 but not during recent decades; it suggests that the 1930s – not
the 1990s – were the warmest decade of the twentieth century.

25
circulation anomalies (more southerly flow). The ! Human health benefits from warmer
role of CO2 in causing those circulation anomalies temperatures.
is poorly understood, making attribution impossible
at this time. In temperate regions, human mortality and
There has been an intense debate also whether morbidity tend to show clear maxima in the winter
a warmer climate will lead to more severe storms and secondary maxima in the summer. While the
and to more frequent and/or more intense tropical secondary maxima are more pronounced in regions
cyclones. Regarding storms, claims that heavy with warmer summer climates, as in the southern
precipitation events in the U.S. increased between U.S. and southern Europe, even in those regions the
1900 and 1990 [Karl and Knight 1998] fails to secondary maxima are smaller than the winter
provide evidence that the increase has anything to maxima. A warming of even 3ºC in the next 100
do with greenhouse gases or temperature, years would, on balance, be beneficial to humans
particularly since there was a slight decline in because the reduction of wintertime
temperatures during that period. Increases in mortality/morbidity would be several times larger
maximum annual 24-hour precipitation amounts than the increase in summertime heat stress-related
have not been observed in Germany in the past 50 mortality/morbidity [Laaidi 2006, Keatinge 2000].
years [DWD, German National Weather Service], The claim that malaria would spread under a
the Iberian Peninsula [Gallego et al. 2006] or in warmer climate has been severely critiqued by Paul
parts of China [Wu et al. 2007]. Reiter, professor, Institute Pasteur, Unit of Insects
It seems quite plausible that higher values of and Infectious Diseases, Paris, France, who points
SST would produce stronger hurricanes [Emanuel out that the incidence of malaria depends on a
2005; Emanuel and Mann 2006]. But historic number of factors, few of them related to climate or
records of Atlantic hurricanes do not bear out such temperature. Historically, malaria was widespread
a prediction [Goldenberg et al. 2001; Landsea 2005, throughout many areas in the temperate or even
2006, 2007]. Recent work by Vecchi and Soden colder regions of the mid-latitudes [Reiter 2005].
[2007] suggests a warmer climate would lead to
increased vertical wind shear, which would impede
the development of tropical cyclones (hurricanes).
! Economic benefits from global warming
And regarding mid-latitude storms, a global Beneficial economic effects of warmer
warming will lead to a lessening of temperature temperatures include longer growing seasons in
gradients between the equator and the poles and temperate climates, benefitting agriculture and
therefore to fewer and/or less intense storms forestry industries [Idso and Idso 2000], lower
[Legates 2004, Khandekar 2005]. heating bills, and lower construction costs.
Mendelsohn and Neumann [1999] presented a
synthesis of previous studies on the costs and
9. The Economic Effects of Modest benefits of global warming, which is summarized in
Warming Are Likely to be Positive Figure 26.
Mendelsohn and Neumann assumed an increase
in temperature of 2.5°C, a 7 percent increase in
Concern that anthropogenic global warming precipitation, and an increase to 530 ppm
might result in harm to human health and welfare atmospheric carbon dioxide by 2060, which they
asserts connections between modest increases in admit “may be somewhat more severe than the most
temperature and increased morbidity and mortality recent scientific assessment in IPCC (1996a).” They
due to heat stress, the spread of tropical diseases found the net impact of global warming on the U.S.
such as malaria and dengue fever, and the negative economy in the year 2060, if no action were taken
effects of warming on some industries. There is to slow or stop emissions, would be positive, to the
little evidence to support these claims, and tune of $36.9 billion, or about 0.2 percent of
considerable evidence in support of the opposite projected GDP. In 2001 dollars this would be about
conclusion, that warmer temperatures benefit human $11.5 billion. The benefits of global warming to the
health and prosperity. agricultural and timber industries more than

26
and (c) would the effects of continued warming be
Estimated Annual Impact on U.S. of
Doubling of CO2 (billions of 1990$) harmful or beneficial to plant and wildlife and to
human civilization?
Sector 2060 economy 1990 economy In this NIPCC report we have presented
Market sector impact estimates evidence that helps provide answers to all three
questions.
Agriculture +$41.4 +$11.3

Timber +$3.4 +$3.4 ! The extent of the modern warming – the subject
of the first question – appears to be less than is
Water resources - - $3.7 -$3.7
market only claimed by the IPCC and in the popular media.
We have documented shortcomings of surface
Energy -$4.1 -$2.5 data affected by urban heat islands and by the
Coastal structures -$0.1 -$0.1 poor distribution of land-based observing
stations. Data from oceans, covering 70 percent
Commercial -$0.4 to +$0.4 -$0.4 to +$0.4 of the globe, are also subject to uncertainties.
fishing
The only truly global observations come from
Total (market +$36.9 +$8.4 weather satellites, and these have not shown
sectors) (+0.2% of 2060 (+0.2% of 1990
GDP) GDP) any warming trend since 1998, for the past 10
years.
Nonmarket sector impact estimates

Water quality -$5.7 -$5.7 ! This report shows conclusively that the human
greenhouse gas contribution to current warming
Recreation +$3.5 +$4.2
is insignificant. Our argument is based on the
well- established and generally agreed-to
Figure 26. The net effects of the modest warming caused by ‘fingerprint’ method. Using data published by
a doubling of carbon dioxide concentrations are likely to be
positive in the U.S., with benefits exceeding costs by some
the IPCC and further elaborated in the
$36.9 billion a year in 2060 (+0.2 percent of 2060 GDP. U.S.-sponsored CCSP report, we have shown
Adapted from Mendelsohn and Neumann 1999, Table 12.2, that observed temperature- trend patterns
page 320.
disagree sharply with those calculated from
greenhouse models.
outweigh losses to the energy industry or damage to It is significant that the IPCC has never
coastal structures. made such a comparison, or it would have
Economist Thomas Gale Moore [1998]also discovered the same result – namely that the
found that earlier estimates exaggerated the costs of current warming is primarily of natural origin
warming. Moore used historical data to calculate rather than anthropogenic. Instead, the IPCC
that if temperatures were 4.5ºF warmer in the U.S., relied for its conclusion (on AGW) on
41,000 fewer people would die each year from circumstantial ‘evidence’ that does not hold up
respiratory and circulation diseases. The annual under scrutiny.
benefits of global warming to the U.S., he estimates,
would exceed costs by $104.8 billion in 1990 ! We show that the twentieth century is in no way
dollars. unusual and that warming periods of greater
magnitude have occurred in the historic past –
without any catastrophic consequences.
10. Conclusion ! We also discuss the many shortcomings of
climate models in trying to simulate what is
The central problems for policymakers in the debate happening in the real atmosphere.
over global warming are (a) is the reported warming
trend real and how significant is it? (b) how much of ! If the human contribution to global warming
the warming trend is due to natural causes and how due to increased levels of greenhouse gases is
much is due to human-generated greenhouse gases? insignificant, why do greenhouse gas models

27
calculate large temperature increases, i.e., show seen during the Medieval Warm Period of
high values of ‘climate sensitivity’? The most around 1100 AD or the much larger ones
likely explanation is that models ignore the recorded during the Holocene Climate
negative feedbacks that occur in the real Optimum of some 6,000 years ago – the impact
atmosphere. New observations reported from would not be damaging but would probably be,
satellites suggest it is the distribution of water on the whole, beneficial. [Lamb 1982, and
vapor that could produce such strong negative Figure 26]
feedbacks.

! If current warming is not due to increasing ! Policy Implications


greenhouse gases, what are the natural causes
that might be responsible for both warming and ! Our findings, if sustained, point to natural
cooling episodes – as so amply demonstrated in causes and a moderate warming trend with
the historic, pre-industrial climate record? beneficial effects for humanity and wildlife.
Empirical evidence suggests very strongly that This has obvious policy implications: Schemes
the main cause of warming and cooling on a proposed for controlling CO2 emissions,
decadal scale derives from solar activity via its including the Kyoto Protocol, proposals in the
modulation of cosmic rays that in turn affect U.S. for federal and state actions, and proposals
atmospheric cloudiness. According to published for a successor international treaty to Kyoto, are
research, cosmic-ray variations are also unnecessary, would be ineffective if
responsible for major climate changes observed implemented, and would waste resources that
in the paleo-record going back 500 million can better be applied to genuine societal
years. problems [Singer, Revelle and Starr 1991;
Lomborg 2007].
! The third question concerns the effects of
modest warming. A major scare associated with ! Even if a substantial part of global warming
a putative future warming is a rapid rise in sea were due to greenhouse gases – and it is not –
level, but even the IPCC has been scaling back any control efforts currently contemplated
its estimates. We show here that there will be would give only feeble results. For example, the
little if any acceleration, and therefore no Kyoto Protocol – even if punctiliously observed
additional increase in the rate of ongoing sea- by all participating nations – would decrease
level rise. This holds true even if there is a calculated future temperatures by only 0.02
decades-long warming, whether natural or degrees C by 2050 [re-calculated from Parry et
manmade. al. 1998], an undetectable amount.

! Other effects of a putative increase in


temperature and carbon dioxide are likely to be To sum up: This NIPCC report falsifies the
benign, promoting not only the growth of crops principal IPCC conclusion that the reported
and forests but also benefiting human health. warming (since 1979) is very likely caused by the
Ocean acidification is not judged to be a human emission of greenhouse gases. In other
problem, as indicated by available data. After words, increasing carbon dioxide is not
all, CO2 levels have been up to 20 times the responsible for current warming. Policies
present value during the Phanerozoic Period, adopted and called for in the name of ‘fighting
the past 500 million years. During this time global warming’ are unnecessary.
Earth’s climate has been remarkably stable, It is regrettable that the public debate over
with no ‘run-away’ greenhouse effects – climate change, fueled by the errors and
indicating strong negative feedbacks. exaggerations contained in the reports of the IPCC,
has strayed so far from scientific truth. It is an
! If, for whatever reason, a modest warming were embarrassment to science that hype has replaced
to occur – even one that matches temperatures reason in the global debate over so important an
issue.

28
About the Contributors

Anderson, Warren. Economist, George Mason Kärner, Olavi, Ph.D. (Physics), Tartu Observatory.
University, author of Fire and Ice. Fairfax, Estonia
Virginia, USA
Khandekar, Madhav, Ph.D. Meteorologist,
Avery, Dennis. Director, Center for Global Food formerly with Environment Canada. Expert
Issues, co-author of Unstoppable Global Reviewer, IPCC 2007. Ontario, Canada
Warming. USA
Kininmonth, William. Meteorologist, former head
Battaglia, Franco. Professor of Chemical Physics of National Climate Centre, Australian Bureau of
and Environmental Chemistry, University of Meteorology. Australia
Modena. Italy
Labohm, Hans. Economist, former deputy foreign
Carter, Bob. Paleoclimatologist and professor, policy planning advisor, Netherlands Ministry of
James Cook University. Townsville, Australia Foreign Affairs. Netherlands

Courtney, Richard. Engineering expert for fuel use Monckton, Christopher. Climate analyst, former
and climate consequences. United Kingdom advisor to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.
Scotland.
D’Aleo, Joseph. Meteorologist, fellow and elected
councilor AMS; first director of meteorology, The Motl, Lubos, Ph.D. (Physics), former fellow at
Weather Channel. USA Harvard, publisher of The Reference Frame blog.
Czech Republic
Goldberg, Fred, Ph.D. (Technology) polar expert,
and co-organizer of 2006 Stockholm Climate Segalstad, Tom V. Associate Professor and head
Conference. Sweden of Geological Museum, University of Oslo.
Norway
Gray, Vincent, Ph.D. (Chemistry) and publisher of
New Zealand Climate Newsletter. New Zealand Singer, Fred. Atmospheric physicist and former
director of U.S. Weather Satellite Service. USA.
Haapala, Kenneth. Economist, energy and
economic modeler. USA Taylor, George. Oregon State University, former
president of Association of State Climatologists.
Heiss, Klaus, Ph.D. Economist and author of USA
survey studies of climate. Austria
Thoenes, Dick. Professor Emeritus, Eindhoven
Idso, Craig, Ph.D. (Ag Meteorology), and University and co-author Man-Made Global
publisher of CO2Science.org. Tempe, Arizona, Warming: Unravelling a Dogma. Netherlands
USA
Uriarte, Anton. Professor of Climatology and
Jaworowski, Zbigniew. Professor, Central Geography, Universidad del Pais Vasco. Spain
Laboratory for Radiological Protection. Warsaw,
Poland Weber, Gerd-Rainer, Ph.D. (University of
Indiana), Consulting meteorologist. Germany
About the Editor

S. Fred Singer, an atmospheric and space physicist, is founder and president of the Science and
Environmental Policy Project, a nonprofit research and education organization based in Arlington, Virginia.
He is professor emeritus of environmental sciences at the University of Virginia.
Singer is the author or coauthor of many books and scholarly articles. Recently he coauthored, with
Dennis Avery, Unstoppable Global Warming – Every 1,500 Years (Rowman & Littlefield, 2007), which was
on the New York Times bestsellers list. Singer’s previous books include The Greenhouse Debate Continued:
An Analysis and Critique of the IPCC Climate Assessment (ICS Press, 1992), Climate Policy – From Rio to
Kyoto (Hoover Institution, 2000), and Hot Talk Cold Science – Global Warming’s Unfinished Debate
(Independent Institute, 1997, 1999).
Singer has been a pioneer in many ways. At the Applied Physics Laboratory of Johns Hopkins University,
he participated in the first experiments using high-altitude research rockets, measuring the energy spectrum
of primary cosmic rays and the distribution of stratospheric ozone; he is generally credited with the discovery
of the equatorial electrojet current flowing in the ionosphere. In academic science during the 1950s, he
published the first studies on subatomic particles trapped in the Earth’s magnetic field – radiation belts, later
discovered by James Van Allen. He was the first to make the correct calculations for using atomic clocks in
orbit, contributing to the verification of Einstein’s General Theory of Relativity, and now essential in the GPS
system of satellite navigation. He also designed satellites and instrumentation for remote sensing of the
atmosphere and received a White House Presidential Commendation for this work.
In 1971 he calculated the anthropogenic contribution to atmospheric methane, an important greenhouse
gas. He also predicted that methane, once reaching the stratosphere, would transform into water vapor, which
could then deplete stratospheric ozone. A few years later, methane levels were indeed found to be rising, and
the increase in stratospheric water vapor was confirmed in 1995.
Singer has served as chief scientist, U.S. Department of Transportation (1987- 89); deputy assistant
administrator for policy, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (1970-71); deputy assistant secretary for
water quality and research, U.S. Department of the Interior (1967- 70); founding dean of the School of
Environmental and Planetary Sciences, University of Miami (1964-67); first director of the National Weather
Satellite Service (1962-64); and director of the Center for Atmospheric and Space Physics, University of
Maryland (1953-62).
In the 1980s, Singer served for five years as vice chairman of the National Advisory Committee for
Oceans and Atmosphere (NACOA). He currently directs the nonprofit Science and Environmental Policy
Project, which he founded in 1990 and incorporated in 1992 after retiring from the University of Virginia.
For more information, visit the Web site of the Science and Environmental Policy Project at
www.sepp.org.

30
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Acronyms
AGW Anthropogenic Global Warming
AMO Atlantic Multi-Decadal Oscillation
AR4 Fourth Assessment Report of IPCC (2007)
CCSP Climate Change Science Program (U.S. Government)
CS Climate Sensitivity
DWR Downwelling Radiation (IR)
ENSO El Niño-Southern Oscillation
FAR First Assessment Report of IPCC (1990)
GCR Galactic Cosmic Rays
GH Greenhouse
GISS Goddard Institute of Space Science (NASA)
GW Global Warming
HTCS Hot Talk Cold Science book (1997, 1999)
IPCC Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (UN)
IR Infrared
ITCZ Intertropical Convergence Zone
LGM Last Glacial Maximum
LIA Little Ice Age
LRSL Local relative sea level
LT Lower troposphere
MJO Madden-Julian (tropical) Oscillation
MSU Microwave Sounding Unit (carried on weather satellites)
MWP Medieval Warm Period
NACC National Assessment of Climate Change (U.S.)
NAO North Atlantic Oscillation
NAS National Academy of Sciences
NH Northern Hemisphere
NIPCC Non-governmental International Panel on Climate Change
OLR Outgoing Long-wave (IR) Radiation
PDO Pacific Decadal Oscillation
SAR Second Assessment Report of IPCC (1995)
SH Southern Hemisphere
SL Sea Level
SPM Summary for Policymakers (of IPCC reports)
SST Sea Surface Temperature
TAR Third Assessment Report of IPCC (2001)
TSI Total Solar Irradiance
UAH University of Alabama – Huntsville
UTWV Upper troposphere water vapor
WAIS West Antarctic Ice Sheet
WV Water vapor

37
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